Hi Marc-Oliver,
I would recommend two small coding style points for writing lisp code
(especially for inclusion into the library of babel).
1. You *never* want to leave trailing ")"'s on a line by themselves,
but rather you should always stack these, indentation is used to
visually identify
Hello,
please find attached an early draft of lob-table-operations.org.
It already has a reasonable documentation and working examples, so it should be
easy to play with.
Some features are still missing (e.g. handling of column names and hlines)
and the coding needs some improvement (using the
Am 27.12.2011 21:53, schrieb Eric Schulte:
Marc-Oliver Ihm writes:
Hello,
Please find attached the elisp-file and a tutorial (as an org-file) for
org-babel-table-proc.
It provides some simple set-operations (mostly merge and intersect),
which treat org-mode tables as sets.
An example for m
Marc-Oliver Ihm writes:
> Hello,
>
> Please find attached the elisp-file and a tutorial (as an org-file) for
> org-babel-table-proc.
>
> It provides some simple set-operations (mostly merge and intersect),
> which treat org-mode tables as sets.
>
> An example for merging two tables would be:
>
>
Hello,
Please find attached the elisp-file and a tutorial (as an org-file) for
org-babel-table-proc.
It provides some simple set-operations (mostly merge and intersect), which
treat org-mode tables as sets.
An example for merging two tables would be:
#+name: lower
| 2 | b |
| 4 | d |
| 5 |